Tuesday, January 08, 2013

Israel: State of Syrian chemical weapons could change in a moment

“Syria’s chemical weapons are under control for now, but no one in
America or Israel can tell what the situation will be five minutes from
now,” a senior Israeli defense official told debkafile
Tuesday, Jan.8. The situation is dangerously fluid because there is no
certainty about who is in control, or when some Syrian chemical unit
commander may take it into his head to use it.”

There were two touch-and-go moments in the last two months – first,
when Assad was on the verge of directing chemical arms to be used
against the rebels; second, when Al Qaeda’s Jabhat al-Nusrah front
fighting in rebel ranks came close to getting hold of them. The first
occurred in the last week of November and the second in the last ten
days of December.

The New York Times Tuesday reported that, in the first
instance, Israel’s top military commanders called the Pentagon to
discuss troubling intelligence showing up on satellite imagery that
“Syrian troops appeared to be mixing chemicals at two storage sites,
probably the deadly nerve gas sarin, and filling dozens of 500-pound
bombs that could be loaded on airplanes.”

American sources then mobilized international forces, Russia, China,
Turkey, Jordan and other Arab nations for sharply worded messages to the
Syrian ruler Bashar Assad and his senior commanders to stop the mixing
of chemicals and preparation of bombs. The sources did not say what
persuaded Assad to halt the process. According to debkafile’s military sources, there was no direct threat of US or NATO military action in Syria.

Our sources add that, among the messages’ recipients, were commanders
of the top secret Chemical Weapons Unit 450 of the Syrian Air Force.
This brought to light for the first time that the US has developed
direct channels of communications to Syrian unit commanders, including a
top-secret air force outfit which has not so far taken part in the
fighting.

According to debkafile’s
American sources, the bombs filled with sarin were not dismantled and
they are still sitting in stores at - or in close proximity to - Syrian
air forces bases, ready for operational use at short notice.

This means that the Syrian ruler in effect flouted the American demand,
although it was backed by Moscow, to dismantle the bombs. In his
defiant speech Sunday, Jan. 6, Assad made it clear that he “no longer
takes dictation from anyone” – especially the West.

It is important to note that sarin nerve gas once mixed has a life of
60 days, after which it must be destroyed. More than half of this period
has elapsed and so the Syrian ruler has until the end of January to
decide how he wants to dispose of those deadly bombs.

The German newspaper Die Welt recently quoted the head of the
BIND external intelligence service as estimating that he Syrian Air
Force was able to have chemical weapons ready for operation within four
to six hours from receiving an order. The New York Times believes that two hours would be enough.

Sunday, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, in a rare comment on
the Syrian chemical weapons question, told a cabinet meeting that the
Syrian regime is very unstable and “the question of chemical weapons
here worries us.” He said that Israel was coordinating with the United
States and others “so that we might be prepared for any scenario and
possibility that could arise.”

Then, in an interview Monday, Netanyahu warned that world peace is
under grave peril from the nuclear weapons under development in Iran and
Syria’s chemical arms arsenal, which could reach the wrong hands. A
senior security official told debkafile
that the prime minister was referring to the repeated rebel assault on
Syria’s largest chemical weapons depot at Al Safira near Aleppo, which
has been repulsed by the Syrian army – for now.